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Canada got the last hurrah at the Celebration of Light Saturday evening, closing the three-night event with a winning display. Canada was declared the winner of the event, with Brazil and China finishing second and third, respectively.

Stephen King's compelling story takes genre to higher level

Scribner

Mr. Mercedes is classic Stephen King. Creepy, yet with realistic characters who get under your skin and stay there, a compelling story that twists and turns at breakneck speed and delightful prose that, once again, proves that one of the great natural storytellers is also among the finest writers around.

What’s billed as King’s first real detective novel captures the story of Mr. Mercedes, a killer so-named because he used a stolen car to plow through a group of hundreds standing in line before dawn to attend a job fair. While the city is never named, it sounds like a Midwestern working-class “anytown” that’s seen better days. The killer escapes and becomes the obsession of retired cop Bill Hodges.

Chasing down Mr. Mercedes literally breathes new life into Hodges who, until then, had spent months in his La-Z-Boy watching bad daytime TV and contemplating suicide. Feeling useful again, Hodges enlists the help of his only real friend, Jerome, the scary-smart, computer-savvy teenager who lives nearby and cuts Hodges’ grass. Their goal: to find Mr. Mercedes before he kills again — likely at a bigger, more crowded venue.

Mr. Mercedes rises above the standard detective-centric, hunt-down-the-killer crime novel because of its characters and its well-timed, unexpected tension.

Murderer Brady Hartsfield is a frightening, racist sociopath who has an inappropriate relationship with his mother and drives an ice-cream truck part-time. Janey Patterson, the sister of the Mercedes’ owner who becomes Hodges’ girlfriend, is feisty, tough and modern. It’s like a good Law and Order episode where the supporting cast is as interesting and integral to the story as the main characters.